In text citation:
For example he will focus on how his technology is such an importance in his life but relays back to his wife, Borow states: “Chloe can walk; she reads constantly. Mostly manuals, but still. Overall, she’s very present” (Borow).

In text citation: When Reilly writes, “Come to think of it, if I were the President of Nike, I’d tell him the same thing”, he appeals to the reader more with his sense of humor and informal nature (2).

In text citation
However, Malburg asserts that “the purpose of the accounting system is to communicate. It produces useful information (not raw data) that tells specific things about the company” (Malburg).

Mulholland addresses, “Kids naturally compare themselves to other children in academic and athletic situations. Because special needs children have deficiencies in these areas, these comparisons create negative self-esteem” (Mulholland).

Nick, this is looking pretty good. However, remember to put periods before and after “print” in your Works Cited. Also, when doing in-text citations you do not need to include “pg” in your parenthetical citations.

2.“Pueblo expression resembles something like a spider’s web-with many little threads radiating from the center, crisscrossing each other. As with the web, the structure emerges as it is made and you must simply listen and trust, as the Pueblo people do, that meaning will be made” (Silko, 369).

In text Citation
“A lot of fans appeared to feel personally betrayed by Ortiz, or “Big Papi,” as he is known to Red Sox Nation — an immensely personable and popular figure, not to mention the greatest clutch hitter in the team’s history”(McGrath).

Leslie Marmon Silko. “Language and Literature from a Pueblo Indian Perspective.” First Year Writing in the Disciplines. Texas Tech University. Third Custom Edition. Longman New York, New York: Pearson Education Inc. 2008, Page 369, 371.

My in-text citation:
Similarly, in “From Silence to Words: Writing as Struggle”, Min-zhan Lu states, “I remember that we were ‘moved’ by Jane Eyre when she was torn between her sense of ethics, which compelled her to leave the man she loved, and her impulse to stay with the only man who had ever loved her,” (383).

In-text citation:
David Sedaris from “Me talk pretty one day” in our text book in Chapter 10 states, “I absorbed as much of her abuse as I could understand…Overtime it became impossible to believe that any of us would ever improve.” (343).

Silko’s opening paragraph talks about how, for Pueblo Indians, language is something very important and that stories and anecdotes lose meaning when they have been rehearsed or written down. It is the emotion in the speaker’s voice that lets the audience know how important that specific story is (369).

In text citation:
It even goes further to state that, “In fact, Dr. Tanaka said, one study of cyclists concluded that because lactic acid is good, it is better not to cool down after intense exercise” (Kolata).

If she used words more unique to the field of research, she would not have appealed to the general public because the words that are used in the field have, “highly subtilized meanings, barely intelligible to anyone who had not mastered the language as a whole” making it hard for each person of the public to be able to produce their own images in their head so she just compared them (Orwell 392).

In text:
“Gone were the days when I could innocently write, “I saw the red, red rose among the green leaves”, collapsing, as I did, English and Chinese cultural traditions. “Red” came to mean Revolution at school, “the Commies” at home, and adultery in The Scarlet Letter” (Lu 382).

Silko, Leslie Marmon. “Language and Literature from a Pueblo Indian Perspective”. English Literature: Opening Up the Canon (1979): 369-77. Print

Cassidy’s article relates very similarly when discussing horse gene studies to Leslie Marmon Silko’s “Language and Literature from a Pueblo Indian Perspective” and her use of a “spider’s web…many little threads radiating from the center” (Silko 369).

Silko, Leslie Marmon. Language and Literature From A Pueblo Indian Perspective. English Literature: Opening Up the Canon. Fielder and Baker. The John Hopkins University Press, 1979. Print.

In text citation: As Malcolm X talks about debates in prison he decides to include the audience to keep them interested by saying, “You would be astonished to know how worked up convicted debaters and audiences would get over subjects like ‘Should Babies Be Fed Milk?’” (360).

In Text: “So many words were still unknown that when the butcher or the lady at the drugstore said something to me, exotic polysyllabic sounds would bloom in the midst of their sentences”(Rodriguez 325).

In text:
“For in spite of the frustration and confusion I experienced growing up caught between two conflicting worlds, the conflict ultimately helped me to grow as a reader and writer” (Min-Zhan 379).

In-Text
For example, Molina HealthCare and the California Academy of Family Physicians describe jargon, “Jargon is a language of familiarity. It can be a useful tool when everyone has a common understanding of the terms at hand – it is verbal shorthand” (3).